Arsenal may have been shocked by the timing and content of Robin
van Persie’s statement announcing he will not sign a new contract – but
in reality it was a fear finally realised.
Van Persie’s reluctance to commit his future to Arsenal
and the failure of his meeting with manager Arsene Wenger and chief
executive Ivan Gazidis to successfully resolve the matter meant the end
was always in sight.
And while there was loose talk after the announcement that Van Persie
and Arsenal could see out their remaining 12 months of contractual
obligation, the tone of the 28-year-old’s message surely signals the end
of his career at Emirates Stadium.
He left little or no room for manoeuvre as he displayed an obvious
lack of faith in Arsenal to take him where he wishes to go and win the
trophies that have eluded the Gunners since 2005.
“In this meeting,” he said, “it has again become clear to me that we
in many aspects disagree on the way Arsenal should move forward.”
Van Persie has announced he will not sign a new deal with Arsenal. Photo: Getty
The tone brooked no argument. Arsenal, it seems, no longer fit in with Van Persie's desire for success.
Van Persie’s public questioning of Arsenal’s future strategy will
have wounded Gazidis but especially Wenger – who clearly feels he has
shown the requisite ambition by signing German international Lukas Podolski from Cologne and French striker Olivier Giroud.
It now seems certain they will be required to replace the weight of Van Persie's goals – 41 in 53 games for club and country last season – rather than add to them.
Wenger might just have expected his treatment from Van Persie to be a
little more sympathetic, at least publicly. He showed commendable
support for Van Persie throughout so many injury-troubled early years at
the club and ultimately made him captain.
He may have been peerless in recent times but Arsenal’s fans have a case when they state it has not always been like that.
Van Persie was well within his rights to state he was not going to
agree a new deal but the embellishment of his statement with a carefully
aimed shot at the club’s hierarchy could be deemed as unnecessary.
He brutally put Arsenal’s aspirations into sharp focus and renewed
the worries of supporters who fear they are falling behind the elite
after watching Samir Nasri secure a Premier League winners’ medal after his move to Manchester City last summer, when they also saw Cesc Fabregas finally return to Barcelona.
And the fear now is that Van Persie will follow the path taken by Gael Clichy, Emmanuel Adebayor, Kolo Toure and Nasri and move to Manchester City.
The champions will have no problem satisfying Van Persie’s wages and
ambitions – although City might not be keen to pay a Premier League
premium for a player who is 29 in August and has, lest we forget, had
plenty of injury problems in the past.
If he maintains his form, he would be a devastating addition for City
and a painful reminder in very close proximity of what Arsenal once
had.
Arsenal and Wenger will be desperately disappointed with Van Persie’s
statement as it merely adds to the suggestion that they have been cut
adrift from the real superpowers, company which they occupied
comfortably for so long.
If Van Persie goes this summer, as he surely will, another of their
crown jewels has disappeared and it is hard to see how Wenger – who in
recent years has not quite been the alchemist he once was – can
compensate for his absence.
The other dilemma for Arsenal is whether they can seriously take a
stand and keep a player who has expressed such public dissatisfaction.
And what is the point of losing out on a handsome fee in exchange for
a player who will have lost the affection of so many supporters in an
instant and who clearly wishes to be elsewhere?
The logical option is to sell to the highest bidder, which is likely
to be Manchester City. Arsenal would presumably prefer to sell abroad
but all the best cards lie in Van Persie’s hands.
Wenger has faced many challenges in the recent barren years as top
players have left, often despite his claims they were staying until
virtually the moment they went through the door, but he will have faced
few bigger than this one.
Arsenal have had enough trouble winning trophies even with Van
Persie’s magical flourishes, to try to do so without them is quite a
task even for Wenger’s powers of management and motivation.
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